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And if I know my little brain - a..."
When I was growing up our father would purposely snarl up words like etiquette with ate-a-cat just for the fun of seeing how often we'd goof and use the wrong pronunciation. Then he'd go on to do the surrealist word-association thing.
Remind me to tell you how one of my aunts once confused 'fainting from heat prostration' with 'fainting from heat prostitution" -- Dad was such a good influence...

It's not that I read the books of my friends and/or relatives and then review those to an unsuspecting public. Far from it... It's more like I read work I like by an author I don't know, and eventually may strike up a conversation or a GR-friendship with the author because I liked their work. And then what? Am I supposed to no longer read or enjoy their books because we're (horrors!) acquainted with one another?

It's not that I read the books of my fr..."
You've more or less hit the conundrum of some of the self-appointed guardians of self-published books offered to the public -- they arbitrarily set up a list of ate-a-cat for everyone to conform with.
One could get the impression the self-imposed gatekeepers truly believe that the 'professional' authors never know each other, never communicate with each other, and never read another's work. This tends to be at odds with the traditionally published work where one professional is quoted on the cover or inside saying something along the lines of "A marvelous romp..." or "A stellar work by an author I admire..." and so on.
As far as I'm concerned the bottom-line is if you like or dislike what you read and then it's your choice on whether or not you rate the work or review it.
If all of us 'amateurs' were trying to game the world of readers it would be readily apparent by the ways we'd be trying to double-down on marketing.
Personally, I'm trying to find more time to read and write more when not fixing someone second-breakfast or cleaning up the result of an uber-pooped diaper. As a result, if I like what I read I'll rate the heck out of it as I think it deserves.
My motives are simple. I read what I choose. I like or dislike what I choose. I rate as I see fit. I believe the 'pros' do the same thing.
When all is said and done we either write a story an audience likes or doesn't like (or kind of sort of likes in a lukewarm way) with the caveat that not all stories are well-received by all audiences.
And if I know my little brain - and I suspect I do - it's going to spend much of the day on two-sentence reveries that include all of thoe tags together.